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Coral Reef Teacher’s Guide What and Where are the Coral Reefs?
The Edible Coral Polyp PRESENTATION:
You may want to prepare a model colony to show
your students before they make their own.
Objective: Students will review the parts of a cor- 1. Group the students into pairs.
al polyp by building an edible coral polyp model.
Interdisciplinary Index: Science, Math, Language 2. Give each pair of students a paper plate. The plate
Arts represents the limestone base to which the coral is
attached.
Vocabulary: coral, polyp, limestone, coral colony,
coral reef, tentacles, zooxanthellae 3. Give each student a marshmallow on a toothpick
and six strips of licorice. The marshmallow repre-
Materials: sents the polyp body and the licorice represents the
• white baking chocolate, candiquik mix, or cake tentacles.
frosting (1/2 ounce for each child) 4. Give each pair one ounce of melted candy coat-
• one marshmallow for each student (substitute: ing from the heat source in a shallow container
(the candy represents the limestone skeleton).
section of banana or strawberry)
• toothpicks 5. Have the students work together. Roll the sides
of the marshmallow in the melted candy coating and
• red licorice (regular or whip): six two-inch strips stand the marshmallows on a paper plate. If the
for each child. If regular licorice is used, cut the marshmallows are placed close enough to- gether,
pieces into small, thin strips. they will attach to each other and resemble a coral
• blue, red or green sprinkles colony.
• heat source (microwave or hot plate) for melting 6. Have the students insert six licorice strips around
candy coating only the top of the marshmallow. Children may want to
use their toothpicks to help them poke the
• pan for candy coating holes.
• paper plates
7. Slightly dampen the marshmallow with water and
sprinkle it with the sprinkles. The sprinkles repre- sent
the zooxanthellae. Use only one color per polyp.
8. Discuss the edible polyp model. Explain what the
marshmallow, the candy, the licorice, the sprin-
kles, and the plate represent.
9. Now have the students pretend that they are
parrotfish or crown-of-thorns sea stars and eat their
polyps. YUM!
Math: Students can count the number of tentacles
on their polyp and multiply by the number of stu-
dents in the class to find the total number of ten-
tacles in the classroom coral colony.
FOLLOW ‐ UP/EXTENSION:
Students may want to write a story about their polyp
or draw a diagram. Have them color the “I’m a Cor‐
al Polyp” Color Page.
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